Audulus, the popular modular synthesis app, is now for iPad! Get it now at a low limited-time introductory price!

With Audulus, you can build synthesizers, design new sounds, or process audio. All with low latency real-time processing suitable for live performance. Audulus's user interface is clean, simple, and easy to learn, allowing you to focus on sound.

New! Support for 20 and 30 note strips added, with new recordings from physical 20 and 30 note music boxes: switch between strip types in the Options dialog.

Extendable strips - extend the strip length as much as you need for a single strip, with extended strips exporting to JPG as up to 10 individual strips in a single image file. Access via the new '+' and '-' buttons to the right of the strip, so they are there when you need them.

New sample strips installed - 'Romeo & Juliet' and 'Swan Lake'.

Fixes/Improvements:

Delete strip button added to strips in the Loader.

Using 2 fingers to pan no longer sometimes adds notes - 2 finger panning should now be a reliable part of your music box composer workflow.

Fixed display of illegal music box notes (where a note cannot be followed by the same note without a quarter note delay)

Illegal notes were incorrectly only displayed if sharp notes were allowed.

With loop off, the current timeline is now left at the end of the strip rather than being returned somewhere.

Loading with more than 7 strips is not as jumpy.

The copy operation no longer clears the copy buffer if there are no notes selected.

Changes:
Strips now export to JPG rather than PNG. Pre-editing of strip BG disabled due to memory limitations - edit the exported strips to customise.

"Jordan wowing us in his piano room at his home in NY. I just set up the PC (Jordan's first PC) and installed the apps before Jordan sat down to play. The PC is a Lenovo A720 running Windows 8 RTM, with 10 point multi-touch at 1920x1080. The app is MorphWiz by Wizdom Music."

Interesting stuff happening in Windows world, I wonder where this will go and if others will follow?

AudioStretch lets you change the playback speed of audio files without changing the pitch and/or change the pitch without changing the speed. Handy for learning music by ear, transcription, or just listening to your music library in a new way.

Unlike most audio time stretching apps, AudioStretch allows you to reduce the speed to zero, so you can "freeze" notes or chords, and can even play backwards at variable speed.

(*) Other than very old iTunes purchases that are protected with FairPlay DRM. Files beyond 1 hour in length will be truncated.

IMPORTANT PLATFORM NOTES:
- This version crashes in iOS 5. Please ensure you're using iOS 6 before installing AudioStretch 1.0, or wait for the next version.
- Requires iPhone 4 or better. You can probably install on an iPhone 3GS, but it's unlikely to run well.

Will it fix the latency issues? The latency on my Nexus 7 under Caustic 2 is currently 72ms, which is no good for anything really. Google had said that latency was something that they were going address, but things have been quiet since the Nexus 7 launch.

So if anyone knows if Android 4.2 will solve these issues I'd like to hear about it.

Sign up here, and spread the word as much as you can please! Or just turn up!

We will have Michael from Audiobus speaking so I hope to see you on Tuesday. I'm sure this is going to be the start of a great monthly event for everyone in London involved in mobile music, so come along at the start.

Of course it's good to see that Ableton acknowledge the many applications that have grown up around but it does make me wonder if they'll ever do anything in the mobile space themselves. They don't have to of course, other have done a very good job of it so far, so you could argue that it becomes less of a priority.

But the description of Push got me thinking. The refer to it as "An instrument for song creation that fits in your backpack with your laptop", and that sounds kind of mobile to me, or at least heading in that direction.

It makes me wonder if in time we could see a Push Mikro in the same way as we saw Maschine Mikro? Who knows. One thing is for sure, Ableton acknowedge that mobile is not going away, that it's a valuable part of the ecosystem and that you can't ignore it.

The lovely people at Audiobus publish a detailed view of where they're at. Well worth a read, and what's more if you come along to the London Mobile Music Makers meetup tomorrow night you can ask questions in person.

Available from Platinum Audiolab right now. Here's what they say about their new banks for NanoStudio:

We are huge fans of the versatile iOS daw app "Nanostudio" by Blip Interactive. As a way of saying "thanks" and to give something back to the community, we are offering our custom soundbanks exclusively for Nanostudio iPhone and iPad users. We have taken patches from some of our top-selling products and adapted them for use in Nanostudio's EDEN synthesizer/sampler, as well as custom drum kits for the TRG-16 mpc styled drum machine that both come with Nanostudio. Also included is a Dubstep demo track completely composed using these sounds and loadable in Nanostudio.

Whilst Caustic 2 is actually a really good app on Android, but the latency is massive. Well, you can see it for yourself above. Even so, once it's running it sounds great and I think it's an excellent music app.

Described as iphone folk. it was all (except the vocal) done with thumbjam, soundprism, sunrizer and alchemy on an iphone. how to tag? written by john stuart and hilary james. an orlando tune.

This is an odd one and I am thinking of adding an acoustic guitar or two and remixing, but if someone would like the vocal stem to do their own thing, I think this is a good one to experiment with. message me if you'd like it.

I'm not sure if I posted this before, but even if I did then it's worth sharing it again.

I mentioned this the other day, but you may have missed it so I thought I'd post it again especially because the developer is Ariel Elkin who is the organiser of the London Mobile Music Meet up which is set for Tuesday the 30th.

So if you did miss this, here's what you missed:

Features of this amazing Steampunk-inspired app

Control realtime effects created by you and your environment through your iPhone or iPod!

Imagine having a personal theremin right on your device that you control by tilting it! || Or changing voice to sound like a robot. || Several different effects and settings to play with!

Great original story and instructions.

Beautiful Steampunk-inspired graphics and interface.

Great for both kids and adults!

Story behind AudioSteam

You've just inherited a most peculiar device from a relative you had long forgotten about. Your family had always said your Great Uncle was a mad man who dabbled in Sonic Alchemy. Obsessed with harassing sounds of an unearthly origin which he called "taming the audio steam"

We will have Michael from Audiobus speaking so I hope to see you on Tuesday. I'm sure this is going to be the start of a great monthly event for everyone in London involved in mobile music, so come along at the start.

If you've used the Buddha Machine app (on iOS) you probably know about the hardware device, which is a nice little piece of kit. Now version 4 is available here, and it immediately goes on my list of things to get.

This is a video demo of "Reactattack", my new Reactable mobile table, with 16 new onirical loops and 4 trance performances.You can download these loops for your Reactable mobile or Reactable Live, in Reactable Community, search "Mexico" or "Victor" and visit my Reactable channel.

If real time audio mangling is your thing then you should really take a look at AudioSteam lite (and in fact the full version which is only $0.99 anyway). The description for both is the same, but the lite/free version is ad supported.

Personally I love this kind of app so it's right up my street and I've been using the full version for a while now.

Features of this amazing Steampunk-inspired app

Control realtime effects created by you and your environment through your iPhone or iPod!

Imagine having a personal theremin right on your device that you control by tilting it! || Or changing voice to sound like a robot. || Several different effects and settings to play with!

Great original story and instructions.

Beautiful Steampunk-inspired graphics and interface.

Great for both kids and adults!

Story behind AudioSteam

You've just inherited a most peculiar device from a relative you had long forgotten about. Your family had always said your Great Uncle was a mad man who dabbled in Sonic Alchemy. Obsessed with harassing sounds of an unearthly origin which he called "taming the audio steam"

We will have Michael from Audiobus speaking so I hope to see you on Tuesday. I'm sure this is going to be the start of a great monthly event for everyone in London involved in mobile music, so come along at the start.

This looks like something worth keeping an eye on. Here's the video description:

This is all coming from ONE arduino. Realtime. Single take. No external effects used except a little bit of bass eq and my compressor. The noise is on the second synth output going to the compressor sidechain. Sequenced on my mpc, but I'll have a sequencer built-in eventually!Also, sorry for the awkward ending...